Tucson Oddity: House spotlights Gable's presence here

The huge Gila monster sculpture includes a literary device - the lizard is reading a book. The art is in the Dunbar Spring Neighborhood.

Rumor has it Clark Gable once lived in Tucson. Whether that's
true, the iconic midcentury actor did spend a lot of time here,
long enough to break hearts as well as Cadillac fenders.

There's a large house near East Grant Road and North Alvernon
Way with a sign labeling it "The Gable House." Neighborhood legend
has it Gable lived there for a year as he mourned the death of his
wife, Carole Lombard, who died in the crash of TWA Flight 3 in
January 1942.

The story is only that, said John Riley, 79, a retired real
estate agent who lived in the five-bedroom, 3,500-square-foot home
with a basement at 2324 N. Madelyn Circle in the mid-1950s.

"To my knowledge, he never lived there," Riley said, adding that
Gable visited to spend time with Gilbert Duncan and his wife, whose
name he didn't recall, and was a childhood friend of Lombard's.
Riley said Gable continued to visit Duncan's wife after Duncan died
of pneumonia in 1942.

Albert Cummings, an 82-year-old retired Realtor who used to
deliver newspapers to the house and lived there from 1968 to 1997
is convinced that Gable lived there.

"He lived in that house for over a year," Cummings said. "He
used to bring boys over there and let them swim in the pool. I'm
certain he lived there."

Both men agree Gable never owned the home.

Real estate agent Lupita Arevalo, who currently owns the house,
has it on the market for $579,000.

Gable might have bought a home if Lombard had not died,
according to a Jan. 2, 1948, Star interview with Gable at the
Arizona Inn, where he often retreated between films:

"Just before the death of his wife, Carole Lombard, stunned the
nation, Gable and she were in Tucson shopping for a ranch. He said,
however, that he has lost interest in living on a big ranch since
that fatal plane crash," the article said.

It wasn't always the desert that called to Gable - once it was a
court summons.

On Dec. 7, 1951, Gable totaled his 1950 Cadillac convertible in
Marana while trying to pass a truck in the rain. He crashed into
44-year-old shop owner Mary Lemme, wrecking her 1947 DeSoto and
injuring her back. She sued Gable for $20,000, then upped her claim
to $40,000 in a suit that dragged on for several years.

Gable's many trips to Tucson for court appearances made
headlines. The paper lauded him for his "common sense" demeanor on
Dec. 20, 1951, in paying his $25 fine for illegal passing.

An eloping Army Master Sgt. Lyle D. Winney and his bride-to-be,
Ginevera Jean Linsley, asked Gable to witness their wedding, and he
complied, posing for a picture with the couple and kissing the
bride.

The civil suit dragged on for years, and the Star would run
stories coaching readers on when they might be able to see him,
such as in a Jan. 6, 1954, story that said, in part: "Nobody knows
whether or not he will show up or not, or if somebody knows that,
somebody isn't telling."

The Star's final mention of Gable came two days later, when
Gable testified, re-enacting the accident for the judge while
admitting he had "one very small drink" just before lunch. Gable
died of a heart attack at age 59 in 1960.

The resolution of the case could not be found in the Star's
archives.

Got an oddity?

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